
on to become chairman of the County Board 1894 - 90 and contested the position of President of the Association at congress in 1898 - but was unsuccessful. Halvey was elected Vice-President at that same congress.
In 1950 Croom could only muster enough players to compete at junior level and stayed at this grade until the mid sixties - regaining senior status again after winning the junior championship in 1965. Meanwhile, Croom were one of three clubs who were moved from the West division to the South division in 1956 in an effort to balance the divisions.
Croom first entered a junior football side in the West in 1954 and continued at this level in the South - winning a South junior championship in 1958 and again ‘64 and ‘67and finishing as county champions that same year. This was the beginning of a very successful era for football in Croom, winning seven South senior and two county senior titles in a period from 1973 - 1983. Many underage honours were also taken in this period. A South senior hurling crown was won in 1982 but this signalled a barren period for hurling in Croom which lasted until the mid nineties, when a new era dawned for the club. Underage coaching and the emergence of a crop of the finest hurlers and footballers ever to come from the area, resulted in a county junior hurling title in 1996, followed by an intermediate crown in 1998. In between these, the club won back to back minor hurling titles in ‘96 and ‘97. Four years later in 2001 the long awaited county U21 hurling title was won, after heartbreak in the finals of the two previous years. As mentioned already this was also a good period for football in the club, with the minor win of 1998 followed by back to back U21 titles in 1999 and 2000. County junior football was claimed also in 1999.
Croom has been well served over the years by quality club officers and committee member - too many to mention. We have also been honoured by the high office attained by many of our members at county board and national level. The Trojan work done by our coaches and selectors at senior and Bord na Nog and our many club volunteers, Lotto etc. is much appreciated.
When it comes to providing players to county teams, Croom has not been found wanting. Most of the present panel have represented the county at various levels from U14 to senior and some have attained the ultimate honour of All-Ireland medals. Peter Lawlor - who captained the last - Stephen Lucey, Mark O’ Riordan and Mickey Cahill as well as Thomas Carmody were all members of that magnificent squad who completed the treble of U21 All-Ireland hurling titles in 2002. Patsy Cahill won an All-Ireland Intermediate medal in 1998 marking no less a man than Henry Shefflin. Lucey, Lawlor and O’ Riordan were joined by club captain Hugh Flavin on the Limerick squad that lost the 2007 senior final to Kilkenny. Donal Murray was on the losing side of the 1980 decider against Galway. Goalkeeper, Ger Flynn, was on 2005 minor side that fell at the final hurdle. John Galvin Jnr was captain of the U21 footballers that reached the All-Ireland final in 2001, that failed narrowly to Tyrone.
And back to the present we wish todays Croom team all the best in their quest to bring the club its first senior hurling title in sixty-six years and almost one hundred years since their first success.